Dvorak Day Four
I’m on day four of this magical adventure and I’m slowly becoming more capable.
I’m averaging around thirty words per minute now in the little typing program, but probably a bit less in real life. At least I don’t want to kill myself when I type anymore. It’s the little things in life, you know?
It has been really fascinating to learn a new skill, start from scratch, and watch my progress daily. One really interesting thing I’ve noticed is that my words per minute don’t really go up during the day, even though it feels easier as I practice more throughout the day. However, when I wake up the next morning I am much faster.
Maybe my brain commits the new information as I sleep or something.
There are a few misconceptions from the comments to clear up too…
Is Dvorak faster? Almost certainly, but not necessarily much faster. Twenty words per minute is about the fastest boost that people seem to get, although there are a few extreme cases of big gains as well as people who get no gains.
Put it this way - no studies say that qwerty is faster. And how could it be? It wasn’t designed to be fast.
More importantly, Dvorak DEFINITELY requires less finger movement. Ninety percent less. That is huge, especially for avoiding carpal tunnel syndrome. I also wonder if it makes using small subnotebook keyboards easier.
Using other computers isn’t a big deal either. Any computer can be switched temporarily in a matter of seconds or you can just go back to qwerty temporarily. Most people don’t forget it.
For me it comes down to this: I can invest time now that will pay some sort of dividend for the rest of my life. Easy choice - I feel like there’s no choice really. Maybe I would have gotten carpal tunnel before and now I won’t. I type thousands of words every week, so it seems likely. Or maybe it will take me a few less minutes to write posts every day. That will add up.
I love stuff like this. I get excited about anything that makes me better or more efficient.


(4 votes, average: 4 out of 5)









April 11th, 2008 at 3:20 am
That’s awesome. I never knew another type of keyboard arrangement existed. Thanks for the new knowledge.
April 11th, 2008 at 3:23 am
“Maybe my brain commits the new information as I sleep or something.”
That is exactly what it does. What you learn throughout the day is reorganized and strengthened as you sleep.
April 22nd, 2008 at 3:26 pm
for some fun typing practice, try out
http://www.crazymonkeygames.com/QWERTY-Warriors.html
of course it works with dvorak as well…
However, don’t be fooled that typing faster/better will make you any happier or richer. You’re already pretty productive at your computer (typing, but also all the other tasks required to set up nice websites with content).
Now you’re starting “a new skill from scratch”, but aren’t you just doing more of the same?
Uwe
May 4th, 2008 at 6:05 pm
A discussion of the Dvorak layout is sometimes used as an exercise by management consultants to illustrate the difficulties of change. The Dvorak layout is often used as a standard example of network effects, particularly in economics textbooks, the other standard example being the competition between Betamax and VHS. These examples are used to demonstrate that inferior technologies sometimes succeed simply because they become customary, even though the Dvorak layout’s superiority is not clearly established.
May 5th, 2008 at 6:34 pm
Another good typing game is play.typeracer.com
Here you can actually go against other online players head to head!
It’s becoming quite the fad.